A Quote by Nicolas Cage

With my name in cement, I feel actualised. - On cementing his hand prints on Sunset Boulevard — © Nicolas Cage
With my name in cement, I feel actualised. - On cementing his hand prints on Sunset Boulevard
I've always been a bit repelled by "Sunset Boulevard", which is wrong about almost everything it touches, whether it's fame, Hollywood, screenwriters, or old ladies. Sunset Boulevard would only make sense to me if it was about John Gilbert and the pool boy.
The cold, mean 'Sunset Boulevard' - a beautiful title, though I suspect it was shot on another boulevard - is further proof of the resurgence of art in the Hollywood of super-craftsmen with insuperable taste.
Sunset Boulevard' is my favorite film.
Seeing Sunset Boulevard was a fantasy come true.
I drove a bus down Sunset Boulevard once, and I didn't kill anyone.
'Sunset Boulevard' by Billy Wilder, it's one of my favorite films. I love all the movies from the 1950s.
The Paramount executives were so pleased with Sunset Boulevard that they asked me to do a publicity tour.
There is - you know, there's receipts for rented cars and license plates and guns and hand prints and palm prints and fingerprints. You know, I want to wait until I'm in a court.
Sunset Boulevard opened in August 1950, and it was pronounced the best movie ever made about Hollywood.
Every Friday I used to have about fifty, sixty kids who would wait for me on Sunset Boulevard and I'd take them all to dinner. All runaways.
I was in the original cast of 'Sunset Boulevard.' I played Betty. But I wasn't on the cast album.
I came from a real tough neighborhood. I put my hand in some cement and felt another hand.
The first time I saw 'Sunset Boulevard' I was probably eight or nine years old, and it really struck me how it's so simply put and elegant, yet there's so much going on.
I've grown to love California: It's the dream of every English musician to come here and work in the sunshine. To walk up Sunset Boulevard, knowing you're going to make music - that's it.
I remember having to take detours around the Hollywood sign to avoid having to see this grotesque poster of myself on Sunset Boulevard.
My dad lived on Sunset Boulevard for a couple of years as a waiter, and he said he'd do a different character every time somebody sat down, just to get some practice.
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